Thursday, September 20, 2018

A Clock. Ticking.

When Your World Stands
Tough And Weighin' You Down
And You've Had Enough Of This Merry-Go-Round
End Your Resistance To Walls You Won't Move
And Runnin' Through Old Déjà Vu's
When There's No Way Out There's Still A Way Through

Cause Now's All There Is
So Peaceful And Still
In Now You Don't Worry 'Bout What's Happened Or What Will
Cause Now Never Ends
And Now's Never Been
And All Of Your Answers Are Waiting For You Here, Now*

This morning I was
waiting at the traffic lights to walk across the busy city road. When the green
man came on so did the countdown clock on the lights and as I watched the
seconds tick away as I walked a funny thought struck me.

Imagine if we had a
clock that could count down the seconds in your life that are left. And you
looked at it every now and then during the day. And you saw the seconds ticking
away as they must do. Would it change the way you view your life? I wouldn’t mind
living a healthy life for another 50 years. Checking out at 98 would be as they
say “a good innings’!

My own “check out” clock or watch would be giving me another
157680000seconds of this thing
we call “Life” But what, after purchasing this clock and turning it on it read 31,536,000. That means you’ve got a year.

Now, this post is not meant
to be morbid or pessimistic. The intent is actually the opposite. I am just
postulating on what difference an invention like this would make to humanity.

I think that sometimes
we live as though our time to depart will never come. And that may be having
consequences on how we live. Sogyal Rinpoche, writing in The Tibetan Book of
Living and Dying, put it well when he said “We are acting as if we were the
last generation on the planet. Without a radical change in heart, in mind, in
vision, the earth will end up like Venus, charred and dead.”

A check out clock, for me, would simply act as a
reminder. Imagine living as if every moment is a precious one. It is. Imagine
spending every moment in appreciation at everything that is unfolding in front
of you right now.

It would make me more aware of the fact that it is hard
to change people and hard to change situations. But the power that I do have is
to change my mind on people and situations. If I am in traffic hooting at the
car that won’t go at the green light, if my plane is delayed another hour, if a
work colleague snaps at me, if my kid breaks some precious china, then I have a
choice to remember the “ticking” and not react like I might usually and instead
with mindfulness decide that I wont waste precious seconds being negative and
reactionary and stressed.

I would use the seconds left to give more and take less.
I don’t have to be rich to give. Smiles, hugs, compassion, empathy, friendship
and more smiles are mine to give away. Every second gives me an opportunity.

I would forgive more. The bully at work. The parent or
family member. The friend who let me down. The perceived enemy.

I would complain less. Accept more. The rainy day is just
as beautiful as the sunny one. I would tell those that I love how much I love
them, more often.

I would recognise that what is not love is a cry for
love.

I would read more books that would inspire me rather than
spend my time flicking through Twitter or Facebook feeds and I would watch TV
or Netflix less. The best stream is the one out in the countryside flowing into
a larger river. That, I would watch more.

I would question more but from a place of loving
kindness. I would speak more to power for social justice.

I would be even more passionate about the act of
volunteering. Deanna who volunteers 10 hours a week in my office would become
Deanna who gives us 36,000 seconds of her precious time a week! We should be
dumbfounded and in awe at such generosity and more so when we realise there are
millions of Deanna’s across the globe!

It will take practice.

We spend so many of our seconds at the workplace. Spend
as much time as you can make it a nicer place to be. There is nothing wrong with
nice. It’s OK to say hello and chat. You can be very busy at work and happy
too. Your toxic colleague need not ruin your day. Be kind and remember that it
could be that they are not aware of their clock ticking.

Eckhart Tolle tells us “... next time you
say, «I have nothing in common with this person,» remember that you have a
great deal in common: A few years from now - two years or seventy years, it
doesn't make much difference - both of you will have become rotting corpses,
then piles of dust, then nothing at all. This is a sobering and humbling
realization that leaves little room for pride. [... ] In that sense , there is
total equality between you and every other creature.”

Got a story to share: Contact DJ

This is my personal blog on matters pertaining to Volunteer Management,Volunteerism and sometimes life in general. It consists of my own opinions and does not represent the opinions of any other person, business or organization.

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Irish born, DJ Cronin commenced volunteering for organisations at the age of 15 and has been active in the volunteering sector for most of his life. DJ believes that volunteerism is a powerful movement for betterment and change in our society, and he is a passionate advocate for the sector of volunteer management as well as effective volunteer engagement and development.